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Life [ top ] Notes Irish Brigade and its Campaigns (1866). [title-page: ] ... with some account of [Col. Michael] Corcorans legion, and sketches of the Principal officers, Cpt. D. P Conyngham ADC, author of Frank ODonnell; Shermans March, etc (Glasgow). .. pride in tracing their progenitors to some old Celtic stock. It is only those who have left their country for their countrys good that are low and snobbish enough to deny their native country. No true man denies his country. [p. 27]. The author served with Sherman in Georgia. Meaghers Zouaves at Bull Run; his horse killed under him; Irish Brigade evolved from New York S. Militia 69th; draws link with flower of Jacobite Army in continental service; at Fontenoy Louis publically thanked the brigade and created Count Lally a general on the field of battle; King George said, Cursed be the laws that deprived me of such subjects. Generals in Union service, John Logan, Geary and Burney; Sweeny, Lalor, Doherty, Gorman, Magennis, Sullivan, Reilly, Mulligan, Stevenson, Meagher, Minty, Shields, Corcoran, PH Jones, Kieran. The Irish soldier did not ask whether the coloured race were better off as bondsmen or freedmen; he was not going to fight for an abstract idea. He felt that the safety and welfare of his adopted country and its glorious constitution were imperilled; ... the Irish soldier was therefore a patriot not a mercenary. [Copy held in Belfast Central Library.]
The ODonnells of Glen Cottage (1903), cited in Chris Morash, Writing the Famine (1995): Writing for a Catholic Irish-American audience, the religious obligations which suffering stirs up in a Conynghams Catholic heroes allow them to triumph in a sectarian struggle agaist the evil Anglican landlord, Lord Clearall and his souper henchman, the Revd. Rob Sly; Morash further refers to the textual strategy of writing the Famine as a purifying crucible of faith which reuires a demonised sectarian Other (p.146). [ top ] Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco) |